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Wedding slideshow
OK - probably over complicating things in my usual way
I've got a wedding in a couple of week's time where they're wanting guests to provide photos of the day to display on my 50" LCD
It's got various inputs etc., but I'm planning on hooking up a small laptop (Windows) to run any photos that are donated of the happy couple.
The big question is....how to get the guest's stuff onto the laptop in the first place?
OK - SD cards from cameras are easy, and in many cases phones as well. What about those ever popular fruit flavoured devices though? From my own bitter experience of getting photos off of my own gadgets with a certain fruit on the back, you can't just connect them to a PC these days very easily and grab them from the phone/pad.
I did think about them uploading to a web thing such as Flikr or similar or even emailing them to me, but network access there is flaky to say the least.
Is anyone else doing this, and if so.....how?
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Web Guru
I'd use a Raspberry Pi running OpenELEC, with the photos on a USB stick. It'd take power from the TV's USB and display through HDMI. You can control it with a remote (any Windows Media remote) or from your phone (if both on the same network).
Or a Chromecast with a slideshow app on a phone / tablet, to photos in Dropbox or stored locally...
It really should be very easy, and inexpensive.
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Dinosaur
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Originally Posted by
Marc J
I'd use a Raspberry Pi running OpenELEC, with the photos on a USB stick. It'd take power from the TV's USB and display through HDMI. You can control it with a remote (any Windows Media remote) or from your phone (if both on the same network).
Or a Chromecast with a slideshow app on a phone / tablet, to photos in Dropbox or stored locally...
It really should be very easy, and inexpensive.
The Pi, to me, would be the best option but wouldn't be so good for anyone who has no idea of the very basics of computing - the hardware side - as they require setting up and installing when you get them. And they use linux-based OSs so might be a bit off-putting for those only with Windows experience.
As for the Google Chromecast, I would rule this out straightaway. You would need to create an an-hoc network connection to connect the Chromecast to. As a Chromecast user (have been for ages!), I know they can be a bit tricky to set up and configure so it might not be best to do this directly prior to the gig. Once they're set up they're fantastic but getting them working in the first place is the tricky bit.
Originally Posted by
Excalibur
Excellent advice Toby, but sadly it doesn't appear to address any of the questions raised by the OP.
He states " photos on the day ", so unless he has a time machine, guests can't Dropbox them to him the day before.
Can people bluetooth them to you? That's way beyond my ken.
Can they connect these fruit based efforts to a stick directly, and transfer them that way?
Presumably, there's a cable for that.
I was thinkin about Toby's comments and, as no-one (prior to you) had picked up on this I thought I must have misunderstood. Unless, of course, what Toby is really suggesting is premaking a slideshow that uses images from a designated folder and the pictures can be copied on the fly and on the day to that folder. That's a potential option!
Dazzy D
Lightning Disco & Entertainment
Born to make you party!
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Web Guru
Originally Posted by
DazzyD
The Pi, to me, would be the best option but wouldn't be so good for anyone who has no idea of the very basics of computing - the hardware side - as they require setting up and installing when you get them. And they use linux-based OSs so might be a bit off-putting for those only with Windows experience.
A decent SD card with OpenELEC preinstalled is only £6 (http://thepihut.com/products/kodi-preinstalled-sd-card). But if you want to do it yourself the best instructions for Windows users are perhaps https://www.squirrelhosting.co.uk/ho...-info.php?id=9 (but get the Diskimage from http://openelec.tv/get-openelec).
Originally Posted by
DazzyD
As for the Google Chromecast, I would rule this out straightaway. You would need to create an an-hoc network connection to connect the Chromecast to. As a Chromecast user (have been for ages!), I know they can be a bit tricky to set up and configure so it might not be best to do this directly prior to the gig. Once they're set up they're fantastic but getting them working in the first place is the tricky bit.
Create your own personal network using something like this or this (this 2nd one should work well with a Pi as well, as you can wire it to the Pi - no need for a USB WiFi adaptor). Set it up before you go (so your phone and / or tablet and / or Pi and / or Chromecast are all on the same network) and you should be good to go.
None of which answers the OP of how to get the day's photos to whatever device you use in the first place! Sorry....
EDIT: If you do go down the Raspberry Pi route and don't want to network it (get the images on a USB stick), this remote works well: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B003ZV3J72/
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